Pets in Mexico
Many of us in Mexico have four-legged friends. What about you? Do you have one or more pets? Share your experience with us!
What are the formalities to import pets in Mexico? What about pet adoption procedures in the country? Did you bring your pet from your home country to your host country? If so, did everything turn out fine?
What do Mexicans think about pets? Are they comfortable with dogs, cats or unusual pets?
Share your advice!
Priscilla
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- Best way to bring pets into Mexico- this is a repost - 27 Replies
We have a group here that provides free spay and neutering twice a year and they also take in stray animals and later put them up for adoption
I wouldn't let having a pet stop you from considering Mexico as a destination and some cities may be different, but it certainly makes finding a place a little harder than not having a pet. Once we found a place and got her there, there were no big issues. At least in Playa, there were numerous good vets. although good quality dog food is expensive and harder to find (had to buy it at the vet as grocery stores only sold Pedigree, Alpo, and other high-corn, high-grain foods). But vet care is much cheaper than in the US as are the international health certificates if you travel back and forth, so it does average out!
If you're flying, you'll also need the airline's rules for transporting animals.
It was absolutely no problem and we all flew from Los Angeles to Leon.
All you need if proof of vaccinations and something to calm them if flying.
I love having them here with me and has just adopted another pero de la calle who is a great little girl
Ivy
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Reason : Do not post your personal contact details on a public forum for your own security
Ivy
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I am glad Debibax asked ivydp about how she transported her dogs. I did fly my cat from Japan back to the US, and back to Japan. . .and back to the US again, and that was. . . easy (then; harder now on the Japan side), but somewhat nerve racking. Moreso for kitty, I assume, but that was my previous cat (made it to 21). This younger cat is not yet flight tested. I notice a lot of people elsewhere flying with their cats under the seat in front of them. I just can't imagine it since my cat enter non-stop meow mode when in the car. Anyway have experience flying their cats into Mexico?
One example; one of our dogs, Ziggy, suffered from a rare form of violent epileptic seizures. We have spent $30,000 Canadian ($22,000 US) to diagnose and begin a very expensive prescription treatment costing more than $200 (about $150 US) monthly. The treatment required three doses throughout the day but they didn't work very effectively. Ziggy had violent seizures about once every two weeks and was basically too drugged to function the rest of the time. After moving to Mexico, we were concerned because this expensive prescription medicine was not even legal in the country. The local veterinarian here in our little village of La Mision de San Miguel sold us some simple pills costing 247 pesos ($12 US) a box. He told us to give one quarter a pill once every morning. We were not terribly optimistic, but, It took only a couple weeks to confirm that Ziggy was siezure free and amazingly, he began to run and bark like a real dog. Ziggy's quality of life is miraculously restored at a small fraction of the former cost.
Our former veterinary clinic in Palm Springs, California, charged about $200 simply to walk in the door. We are often charged nothing for minor issues such as pulling a tooth at the clinic in La Misión.
A negative comment; I have noticed in our rural village that many dogs are poorly taken care of. I see abandoned dogs sorely underfed, diseased and ignored. Some expats have teamed with local vets to provide free animal treatments a couple weekends during the year.
two King Charles Cavaliers and three cats. We stayed in La
Quintas which treated our animals well. We got all the
animal shots and paper work in NJ so everything was smooth
going across the border. La Quinta in Mexico doesn't take
dogs. But lots of AirBnBs do.
Our dogs didn't do well in San Miguel. They were nervous and
frightened all the time with the noise and the fireworks. It got
so bad one of them wouldn't go outside to go to the toilet. The
cars and traffic really spooked them when we were walking.
We could take them to the Botanical gardens though. They needed
grooming constantly.
San Miguel was very bad for these dogs. It was too noisy with
fireworks and traffic. We couldn't walk on side walks with them.
The last straw was when we woke up one morning to find Lady
Charlotte dead on the floor of a heart attack. We were devastated
and decided to come back to the states. We believe she has just
been so stressed out.
One the plus side. We had a wonderful vet and holistic vet and groomer
who treated our dogs very well and were up on the latest medications.
They are also welcome in most restaurants as long as you sit outside.
The same medications were much cheaper in Mexico.
Perhaps you will have better luck than we did. Smaller dogs might do
better.
Good luck.
Renee
I have live in Mexico for the past 25 years and always had cats, (neutered) and only went in my garden or balcony, no street cats so they did not bother anyone.
I have live in Mexico for the past 25 years and always had cats, (neutered) and only went in my garden or balcony, no street cats so they did not bother anyone.
Just make sure you have all of his shots up-to-date and you will need a vet certificate stating he or she is healthy. They need Rabies shot and liquid against fleas and ticks. All must be done no more than 14 days prior to travel with your pet.
If you are traveling from Canada, the only airline that accepts pets onboard is WESTJET, and if your cat is no more than 10 kilos and fits under the seat in front of you.
I am fortunate that Princesa travels well, she does not cry and most people do not know I have a pet in my soft travel case.
So good luck traveling with your cat.
Kate
Thank you very much for the information. Would you kindly tell me what the simple pills were labelled for $12 a box? my Standard Poodle has epileptic fits, I give him a special oil each morning and very concerned if I move to Mexico I wouldn't be able to purchase the oil. So an alternative would be a relief, maybe I can even buy these pills over the internet?
Thanks again
Ro London
Here is the link to what the box looks like:
 Buena Suerte.
Again, I am sorry for your loss. Â

We got a mild sedative from our vet, gave each cat 1/2 a dose and they were fine.
Does anyone know a good vet in Cancun center?
papusa wrote:It was JetBlue, but I was following guidelines given to me by the Consular office in the US. However, there were people at the airport office going to South America, Europe and North Africa, so it must have been multiple airlines.
I would suggest not checking with the US Consular office. Check with the airlines directly. They are the ones that know what they want. It might save you some time.
And of course, all that was worth it to have him here. Life in Playa has been amazing with our dog! We live in a gated community with cheap rent and tons of dog-loving neighbors! We have a little dog walking group that gathers twice a day and it's great for socialization.
We plan on heading to the US someday and will most likely just drive because the hassle with the first trip was just ridiculous. Has anyone crossed the border with a pet?
We flew down from SW FL to Cancun with them in August, just an extra short stop at an import office at the airport. The officer just looked at the paperwork (recent health cert. with up to date shots) and the kitties and we were off! We'll be sailing down in June so will get new health certificates and we're all set. Mexico is pretty easy.Â
In Panama City they tried to charge us $54 for "rodent control". My husband went down below, grabbed Chico and simply said "I assure you, there are NO RODENTS on this boat!" They waived the fee :-)
I know they run on the wall around the neighbors yard. The neighbor has two dogs. One cat just parked himself on the top of the wall and watched the dogs going crazy.
So it is not as simple as you might think.
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